The Invisible Dance of Atoms: How One Man Solved Chemistry’s Greatest Black Box
Heterogeneous catalysis powers eighty percent of global industry, from the production of fertilizer to cleaning car exhaust. Yet, for decades, the precise atomic events occurring on the surface of these solid catalysts were utterly invisible-a profound "black box" that separated academic theory from industrial reality.
The Atomist of the Surface is the definitive biography of Gerhard Ertl (Nobel Laureate, 2007), the rigorous physical chemist who systematically demolished this intellectual barrier. By adapting ultra-high vacuum technology and perfecting the single-crystal model, Ertl transformed surface science from a field of guesswork into a predictive, quantitative discipline. He created the tools necessary to achieve the "atomistic picture"-to see chemical reactions unfold, atom by atom.
His decades of painstaking work delivered the definitive mechanistic blueprints for two reactions that sustain modern civilization: the Haber-Bosch process, which feeds billions, and the oxidation of carbon monoxide, the core of the modern automotive catalytic converter.
This book chronicles Ertl’s life, his methodological revolution, and the global legacy of the "Ertl School"-a vast intellectual diaspora that continues to drive sustainable chemistry. It is the story of how a relentless quest for fundamental order at the smallest scale yielded the greatest technological and environmental rewards for humanity. Approx.184 pages, 33700 word count